Are Wheel Stops Required by OSHA?
Does OSHA require wheel stops in commercial parking lots?
OSHA does not mandate wheel stops in any standard. However, OSHA 1910.176(c) requires aisles and passageways to be kept clear and in good repair, and 1910.22(d) requires walking-working surfaces to be free of trip hazards. In a court setting, a vehicle bumper that overhangs a sidewalk and creates a pedestrian trip hazard becomes a recognized hazard the employer is expected to control. The fastest control is a wheel stop. Property owners face liability whether or not OSHA cites them directly.
Key takeaways
- No OSHA standard cites the words "wheel stop" by name
- OSHA 1910.22 and 1910.176 create indirect requirements through walking-working-surface and aisle-clearance rules
- ASTM F1638 governs wheel stop performance specifications, not installation requirements
- ADA Section 502 wheelchair clearance creates a separate, independent requirement
- Property liability case law treats wheel stops as a "recognized hazard control" for foreseeable bumper-overhang injuries
What OSHA standards apply to parking-lot wheel stops?
OSHA's general industry standards apply to commercial parking lots that serve OSHA-covered employers. The relevant standards:
29 CFR 1910.22 — Walking-working surfaces
29 CFR 1910.22(d)(1) requires that walking-working surfaces be inspected as necessary to ensure they are in safe condition. Subsection (b)(1) requires surfaces be free of hazards including sharp or protruding objects, loose boards, corrosion, leaks, spills, snow, and ice. A vehicle bumper protruding into a pedestrian sidewalk is a "protruding object" creating a hazard at head, knee, or shin height.
29 CFR 1910.176 — Materials handling
29 CFR 1910.176(c) requires permanent aisles and passageways to be appropriately marked. In warehouse loading-dock environments, this is the closest OSHA gets to mandating dock-side wheel stops; the marking requirement is read by inspectors to include physical wheel stops where vehicles routinely back into pedestrian routes.
29 CFR 1910.144 — Safety color code
29 CFR 1910.144 sets the color conventions for accident-prevention signs and tags. Yellow is the standard color for "caution" and "physical hazards." Wheel stops painted yellow with reflective stripes follow this convention; wheel stops left unpainted in environments where they pose a tripping risk to pedestrians may be cited under 1910.22 even though no specific color rule applies.
What about ADA Section 502?
ADA accessible parking has a separate, independent requirement. The U.S. Department of Justice's ADA Standards for Accessible Design, Section 502, governs the dimensional, slope, and route-continuity requirements for accessible parking. Wheel stops are not required by ADA Section 502, but the 36-inch wheelchair clearance in the access aisle creates an indirect requirement: a vehicle bumper that overhangs into the access aisle violates the clearance rule.
The fastest fix for bumper-overhang non-compliance is a wheel stop. For the dimensional and color spec see our ADA wheel stop placement guide.
What does ASTM F1638 govern?
ASTM F1638 is the Standard Specification for Wheel Stops. It governs:
- Material composition (concrete or recycled rubber)
- Compressive strength (minimum 3,000 psi for concrete)
- Dimensional tolerances (length, width, height)
- Anchor pull-out strength (minimum 1,500 pounds vertical)
- Surface texture and color stability
ASTM F1638 is a product specification, not an installation mandate. It tells manufacturers what a wheel stop must be; it does not tell property owners where wheel stops must be installed. Reference ASTM F1638 in product specifications when ordering, particularly for fleet-yard or warehouse applications. See our wheel stops for warehouse loading docks guide for the heavy-duty use cases.
Where does liability come from if OSHA doesn't require wheel stops?
The liability path for a parking-lot injury runs through state premises-liability case law, not OSHA. The standard:
- Foreseeability. A vehicle parked at the head of a stall predictably overhangs the front 18 to 30 inches.
- Recognized hazard. A bumper at sidewalk height is a known trip and impact risk for pedestrians.
- Available control. Wheel stops are inexpensive, widely available, and effective.
- Failure to control. A property owner who has not installed wheel stops in a stall that abuts a pedestrian route has failed to control a foreseeable, recognized hazard.
In Oregon, premises-liability cases under ORS 30.075 and the broader negligence framework can produce settlements ranging from $25,000 for soft-tissue injuries to over $250,000 for fall injuries with broken bones. The cost of installing 50 wheel stops at $80 to $185 each ($4,000 to $9,250 total) is dramatically cheaper than one settlement.
Who actually requires wheel stops by ordinance?
A handful of Oregon municipalities reference wheel stops directly in their parking-lot design codes:
| Jurisdiction | Code Reference | Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Portland | Title 33.266 | Wheel stops or curbs at any stall abutting a pedestrian path or landscaping |
| Salem | Salem Revised Code 79.110 | Wheel stops at stalls abutting sidewalks or building walls less than 18 inches |
| Eugene | Eugene EPP 9.6410 | Wheel stops or continuous curb required when stall abuts a planted area |
| Hillsboro | HMC 12.36.150 | Wheel stops in any stall where bumper overhang would extend onto required landscaping |
Are wheel stops required at warehouse loading docks?
Loading docks are governed by OSHA's general-industry walking-working-surface and materials-handling standards. While OSHA does not specifically mandate wheel stops at loading docks, the combination of:
- Heavy vehicles backing toward dock-edge drop-offs
- Pedestrian routes adjacent to truck-staging areas
- Routine bumper overhang from delivery trucks
means most warehouse property owners install dock-leveler-side wheel stops as a matter of course. Cojo's wheel stops for warehouse loading docks coverage walks through the heavy-duty 8x6x84 spec used at most Hillsboro and Portland warehouse properties.
For fleet yards where heavy trucks park overnight, wheel stops are also standard practice; see wheel stops for fleet yards.
What about residential properties?
Residential property owners (single-family and small multifamily) are not OSHA-covered employers. Wheel stop requirements come from:
- HOA covenants and design guidelines
- City building permits and parking-lot design ordinances
- ADA, when residential parking includes designated accessible stalls
Most Oregon residential ordinances do not require wheel stops. HOAs may add their own design rules. The liability framework still applies — a property owner whose unprotected parking stall causes a guest's injury can be sued under standard negligence law.
Cojo Hillsboro warehouse compliance case
A 92,000-square-foot Hillsboro warehouse we serviced in March 2026 had OSHA inspection in February for an unrelated dock-edge incident. The inspector flagged 12 truck-staging stalls along the building's south wall where the wall sat 14 inches high — below the 18-inch threshold where the wall stops a bumper. Because pedestrian routes from the breakroom door crossed those stalls, the inspector cited 1910.22(b)(1) for the trip hazard. We installed 12 heavy-duty 8x6x84 concrete wheel stops, painted them safety yellow with reflective tape, and the warehouse closed the citation in the next site visit.
The total install ran $2,840 in materials and labor. The OSHA citation, had it not been corrected, carried potential penalties starting at $15,625 for a serious violation under OSHA's 2026 penalty schedule.
If your property has any combination of pedestrian routes adjacent to parking stalls, accessible stalls, or warehouse-style loading-dock environments, work through our wheel stops buyer's guide or contact Cojo for a site-specific compliance walk. For Hillsboro tech-corridor warehouse work see our wheel stop installation Hillsboro coverage.
Industry Baseline Range
| Item | Range |
|---|---|
| ASTM F1638 compliant 6-foot precast concrete wheel stop, supplied | $40 to $80 |
| ASTM F1638 compliant 6-foot recycled rubber wheel stop, supplied | $55 to $95 |
| Heavy-duty 8x6x84 warehouse wheel stop, supplied | $95 to $180 |
| Per-stop installation, asphalt anchor | $30 to $65 |
| Per-stop installation, concrete epoxy + rebar | $40 to $80 |
| Compliance walk and OSHA-spec verification, 50-stall lot | $400 to $850 |
| OSHA serious violation penalty, 2026 minimum | Starts at $15,625 |
Current Market Reality
OSHA penalty schedules adjusted upward 7.7 percent in early 2026 per the agency's annual inflation adjustment. ASTM F1638 compliant wheel stops cost roughly 12 percent more than non-spec products, but the difference is recovered in the first warehouse-truck impact event. Property owners on a tight budget should compromise on color and reflective tape (commodity products) before compromising on the body spec.
Reviewed by Cojo lead estimator. This article reflects 2026-05 OSHA, ASTM F1638, and Oregon municipal-code references. Always verify current requirements with your local jurisdiction.